Pubdate: Wed, 02 Sep 1998 Source: SLO County Telegram-Tribune Section: Editorials, page B-6 Contact: http://sanluisobispo.com/ NOT IN MY BACK YARD, IF YOU PLEASE The Issue: Proposal To Build A Prison In Paso Robles Our View: Residents Have Good Reason To Be Skeptical Sooner or later, every community faces a decision on an issue that produces NIMBY; not in my backyard. That's how a lot of folks in Paso Robles feel about proposals by two Bakersfield corporations to build a minimum-security prison in their beloved community. We suppose it was inevitable that such proposals would surface somewhere on the Central Coast. And our editorial judgment is that we don't like it any more than the people of Paso. You can make a case for the jobs and the tax revenue a prison would produce. It's also evident that California is in need of more prisons. Our state wants tough law enforcement. One of the by-products of tough law enforcement is criminals. One of the by-products of criminals is the need of a place to house them. The result: prisons. What has changed in recent months, however, is that the state apparently is losing its passion for building more prisons. Californians are embarrassed that their state sometimes spends more money on prisons than it does on schools. That embarrass-ment apparently has had its effect on our lawmakers in Sacramento. Which brings us to private enterprise. There already are 16 privately-run prisons in the state, and Corrections officials say they seem to be the wave of the future. Before this issue runs it course, the private sector may make a convincing case for a prison in Paso Robles, especially if iron-clad assurances can be given that security, even at a minimum facility, will be at a maximum. Also to be determined is where the prison would be built - near whose backyard. An "ideal" location may be found. But at this stage of the discussions, we sympathize with the Paso Roblans who don't want signs posted along the highway reading: "State Prison, Next Exit." - ---